Litotes
Well-Known Member
It's funny, though. The traffic into the Haven Ports (Harwich, Felixstowe, Ipswich, Mistley and Manningtree) is just as concentrated as that at Southampton, and the Landguard turn is as sharp as that of the Thorn Channel. But we very rarely see complaints from Harwich Harbour Authority. Where does the difference lie?
I have long suspected the answer to that question. The Solent attracts not only a lot of the finest sailors in the world, but also a lot of occasional sailors and people for whom sailing is somehow seen as "glamorous" or for whom it is just one amongst many different leisure pursuits in which they participate.
Sailing on the east coast is not "glamorous" (the mud sees to that) In many ways it is more demanding than Solent sailing, for example because of the shifting banks, tidal conditions etc. and it also takes more planning. Very few of us can just jump in the boat and go whenever we feel like it. We have to think ahead and know the exact state of the tide at all times. Also, of course, marina hopping isn't quite such an easy option (except, perhaps, on the Orwell, which has become the Hamble of the east) and "apres sail" activities are pretty much limited to a selection of very good pubs - if you can get ashore, of course.
Of course, the east coast is a lot less crowded, so there are simply fewer boats and, thus a smaller number of less competent sailors. But it is also less attractive to the the occasional sailors and the ones who sail for reasons other than a dedicated love of boats, sailing and all things nautical. Sunsail certainly isn't interested in us!
No criticism of the Solent intended. Some of the finest sailors in the land sail there. But the characters of the two areas are very different.